Not in the episodes I've seen, sorry. But, if I ever come across it in one of the ones I haven't seen yet, you're the first person I'll tell. Pinkie swear.
At least nothing committed by the IMF Force. I can't remember off-hand what some fictional dictator in some episode they were trying to stop might have done, it's been a while. But you have to remember: they're only a team of four. And it was '60s-'70s TV. How much and how bad could the IMF actually do? Really,
really,
really think about that for a moment.
A television show in the '60s and '70s.
Anyway...
All the episodes I've seen involve the IMF getting into and out of sticky situations with a dictator overthrown, a mob boss stopped, or someone crooked and corrupt exposed. That's what the series was. Don't forget, this show was also produced by Desilu Studios, just like
Star Trek. So, in a studio sense (not a franchise sense since The Franchise didn't exist yet),
Mission: Impossible was
Star Trek's sister show.
Mission: Impossible was a very visual show. You had to watch it as in
watch it. Your eyes had to be glued to the TV. If you just listened to it, you'd be totally lost. The suspense and the thrill and the enjoyment I get out of watching it is seeing how they get into and out of situations they ended up in on their missions. It wasn't really plot-driven or character-driven, so much as "these are the mechanics of how you stage an operation" and watching them pull it off.
Also, while we're on the subject: the soundtrack for the
Mission: Impossible series is awesome. Lalo Schiffrin was a great composer. I love his soundtracks for the Dirty Harry films too. And I also get a kick out watching the styles change as the show shifted from the '60s to the '70s. So there are all kinds of things I like about the show.